ABSTRACT

The UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE of Knowledge and Pleasure, an old-style London monthly magazine, had published 113 volumes, 1747–1803, before updating itself in a new series, 1804–1814 (21 volumes), and, finally, as New Universal Magazine (four volumes in 1814–15). The second series and the New Universal Magazine, published by H. D. Symonds and his successors Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, contained a total of five reviews of Byron, but the last of these—a review of Hebrew Melodies (New Universal Magazine, III, July 1815, 37–38) – was not available in facsimile.